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Ecuador Arrests Alleged Hezbollah Member on U.S. Terror List in Quito Raid

Ecuador’s interior minister says authorities in Quito have arrested a Syrian man identified only as M.K., whom the United States lists as a terrorist threat for alleged membership in Iran‑backed Hezbollah, and have begun deportation proceedings after determining he entered the country without proper documents. John Reimberg said on X that the suspect was detained in a joint operation involving immigration officials and national police intelligence, and that he had previously been arrested in Ecuador in 2005 on charges of running a drug‑trafficking network that allegedly moved millions of dollars for Hezbollah before being granted provisional release in 2012. The move comes as President Daniel Noboa, a close ally of President Donald Trump, has formally designated Hezbollah and Hamas as terrorist organizations and claims they advise Ecuador’s powerful cocaine gangs, even as murder, disappearances and extortion have remained high despite a two‑year domestic crackdown. It also unfolds against a broader U.S.-backed regional campaign: Ecuador and Washington recently joined a 17‑country anti‑cartel alliance launched by Trump, carried out joint strikes on drug targets inside Ecuador, and sunk a "narco‑sub" near the country’s northern border, while the FBI prepares to open an office there to work on organized crime and money laundering. The case underscores how U.S. terror designations, Iran’s regional proxy networks, and Latin American drug trafficking are increasingly intertwined in Washington’s and Quito’s security calculus, even as concrete public evidence about the suspect’s current operational role remains thin beyond official statements.

National Security and Terrorism Latin America and U.S. Policy Hezbollah and Iran-Backed Groups

📌 Key Facts

  • Ecuador arrested a Syrian man identified as M.K. in Quito, described as a U.S.-listed terrorist threat and alleged Hezbollah member, in a joint operation involving immigration authorities and national police intelligence.
  • Interior Minister John Reimberg said deportation proceedings have begun because the suspect entered Ecuador without proper documentation.
  • Reimberg said M.K. was previously arrested in Ecuador in 2005 for allegedly leading a drug-trafficking network that moved millions of dollars for Hezbollah and was granted provisional release in 2012.
  • President Daniel Noboa has blacklisted Hezbollah and Hamas as terrorist organizations, claiming they advise Ecuadorian drug gangs, and is cooperating with a 17-country anti-cartel alliance launched by President Trump.
  • The FBI plans to open an office in Ecuador to investigate organized crime, money laundering, and corruption alongside local authorities.

📊 Relevant Data

Hezbollah has been involved in drug trafficking and money laundering networks in Latin America for nearly 50 years, cultivating ties with local drug traffickers to finance its terrorist activities.

WATCH: Senate Drug Caucus hearing on Hezbollah's ... - YouTube — YouTube

Ecuador's homicide rate increased from 5.8 per 100,000 people in 2019 to over 40 per 100,000 in 2023, with projections estimating around 9,100 homicides in 2025, equivalent to about 50 per 100,000, despite government crackdowns.

Ecuador's criminal crisis | Global Initiative — Global Initiative

The foreign-born population in Ecuador was 425,045 in 2022, representing about 2.4% of the total population of approximately 17.7 million, with the largest immigrant groups from Venezuela (over 200,000) and Colombia.

Ecuador is Home to Immigrants from 189 Countries - Latina Republic — Latina Republic

Ecuador's government crackdown on gangs under President Noboa has fractured criminal networks, leading to internal confrontations and spikes in violence as groups compete for control.

Ecuador's crackdown on gangs fractures criminal networks and fuels ... - Reuters — Reuters

There are up to 250,000 people of Lebanese descent living in Ecuador, forming a community that has historical ties to migration from Lebanon.

Lebanese Ecuadorians - Wikipedia — Wikipedia

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March 26, 2026